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Readers` Reviews

★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
gertie
really liked reading this book BUT so frustrated as I can't find a CD or MP3 copy of this book
I like to listen to David Weber books as I drive and my granddaughter really gets the book this way
Audio download doesn't work for me -- it has to be on CD's A Beautiful Friendship works beautifully as
a car story.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
christine lacey
I see he is doing a book whereby there is an additional author. I would presume that he does the outline and lets the other person fill it out. I don't see a problem with this as long as credit is given to the other person.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
patti margarita
This series may have been aimed at the younger folk but i like it very much . I will get the next in the series if there is onel I 've been reading Science Ficton for 60 yrs these stories stand up to the very best.
Mission of Honor (Honor Harrington) :: Storm from the Shadows (Honor Harrington - Saganami Island Book 2) :: Flag in Exile (Honor Harrington Book 5) :: Into the Dark (Alexis Carew Book 1) :: House of Steel (Honor Harrington Universe Book 1)
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
arlene
I enjoyed the book very much and got into it. I would recommend it to anyone. I am curious to find out what the next book would be like and i will buy it as well. Thanks David for letting me look through your eyes at your thoughts
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
gale costa
she aint Honor but you sure know where Lady Dame Baroness Admiral Honor Stephanie Harrington -Alexander , Steadholder Harrington came from and you know where she got her cojones . Mess with Lionheart , mess with Nimitz , nah do everybody a favor . go out in the back yard and shoot yerself . Long live the clan Harrington !!!
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
amber senser
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. Interesting characters in an exciting plot that moved characters and story forward at a brisk (but not too fast) rate. Enough description to keep me connected but not too much. A chance to see the main characters develop and mature, while giving us more about the treecats and their world and how it all works together.

A book I highly recommend to all ages.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
vishak
Fire Season continues Stephanie Harrington's saga. While it is a good read, it is also geared to a younger reader. Teenage angst, does he/she love me or not, is not as appealing if you have read the rest of the Harrington/Star Kingdom saga first. It is, however, a great lead in to the rest of the saga. While not as technical as the more adult series, it still provides information about the developing interactions of the tree-cats and their adopted two-legs as we see how they got from there to Honor. Maybe, I'm just being picky, though, but it seems to be talking down to the reader a bit.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
aditya arie
What a delightful series. I love the interaction between the treecats and humans, especially Stephanie and Lionheart. Great dedication and education.
I'd reccomend this book series for preteens and up. (only because of the higher educational language)
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
cherrij
Decent book. Fun quick read. Probably giving the book an extra star because of the world but that is half the point in scifi novels. Plot is pretty predictable but still a bit of action. Interesting view of the Star Kingdom before it becamw a galactic powerhouse.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
brad l
This is a story centered around Honor as a teen showing glimpses of what she will one day become. It is well paced and fills in much about treecat society and how Honor and her treecat's relationship developed in the early part of their association. Enjoyed it very much. Definitely recommend it.
★ ★ ☆ ☆ ☆
diane crites
There is not very much Weber in this (if any). Story is remarkably verbose and slogging for a juvenile target. Seems to have been written BY a juvenile rather than FOR a juvenile. Science part of SciFi is completely lacking. Disappointed.
★ ★ ☆ ☆ ☆
jason hyde
Fire Season
A major disappointment ! With an angst ridden ancestor like this one it's amazing that Honor Harrington isn't still a moody, moping junior officer and still posted to Basilisk Station ! Evidently not all collaborations are as successful as Lewis and Clark !
As always the bright side is that the store's pricing and service were outstanding !
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
renee gaylard
"Fire Season" is the second book in the "Star Kingdom" series set in the Universe of David Weber's "Honor Harrington" series but some five hundred years earlier. These stories are particularly aimed at young adults but can be read by older readers.

This book follows on from "A Beautiful Friendship (Star Kingdom (Quality))" which describes how Stephanie Harrington, a twelve-year-old girl from the first generation of Honor Harrington's family to move to the Manticore system, became the first human to be "adopted" by a Sphinx treecat. This was originally written as a short story which was first published in the collection "More Than Honor" and can also be found in the more recent anthology "Worlds Of Weber," but was then extended to a novel.

For anyone who has never read any of the Honor Harrington books, "Treecats" are a small arborial sentient species native to the planet Sphinx who look a bit like six-legged cats with long tails. Among themselves they are fully telepathic: they can read the "Mind-glows" of humans well enough to be empathic, e.g. they can read emotions but not thoughts. Treecats find the mind-glows of many humans attractive and in some circumstances a human and a treecat can form a lifelong bond similar to those between the human and dragon characters of Anne McCaffrey's Dragonflight series. This relationship is referred to in Weber's novels as "adoption."

"A Beautiful Friendship" told the story of the first such bonding, of how Stephanie came to be known as "Death Fang's Bane" among the treecats, and of the struggle to have treecats recognised as an intelligent species with legal rights corresponding to human rights. No human alive in Honor's time has personal memories of Stephanie because Weber tells us in "Mission of Honor: Honor Harrington, Book 12," a book in the Honorverse main series, that the first generation of the "Prolong" technology which allows Honor and many characters of her generation to expect a vastly extended lifespan first became available about a hundred years before that book - e.g. four hundred years after the birth of Stephanie Harrington.

However, treecats can and do share memories, and one of the most important groups in their society are "Memory Singers" who act as a living library of important memories, which can be very old. Nimitz's wife Samantha, who is bonded to Honor Harrington's husband Hamish Alexander, is a memory singer. And in A Rising Thunder (Honor Harrington) which came out in March 2012, Samantha introduces Honor to "Sorrow Singer," a treecat memory singer who holds such a memory of Stephanie Harrington and can tell Honor, "You would have liked her. She was much like you in many ways."

A major focus of both the first books in this new prequel series is on how an intelligent but non-technological species like the treecats might react to the arrival of human colonists on their world, and on the good and evil ways that a society of human colonists might react to the discovery that the planet where they have been building a home for several generations is home to a native intelligent species.

At the start of this book, a few T-years after the start of the first one, Stephanie is approaching her 15th birthday and suffering a bad case of the usual teenage tension with her parents. She is interested in treecats, ecology & science, and flying, and very uninterested in making friends with humans, particularly most of her fellow teenagers. Some of whom are actually nice people and some are not - this aspect of the book is a fairly typical coming-of-age story.

This attitude begins to change when a delegation of off-planet scientists arrives to review whether treecats are really intelligent. Stephanie is strongly attracted to Anders, the son of the leader of these scientists, who is about her own age.

Sphinx's forest ecology is dependent on occasional natural forest fires, although these can threaten treecat clans and human homes alike. Because careless human activity can make this risk worse, the ranger service in which Stephanie is an apprentice is concerned to control forest fires during the planet's "fire season." Stephanie and her friend Karl find themselves involved in several rescue attempts - with unexpected consequences ...

There are no space battles in "A Beautiful Friendship" or "Fire Season." Like Honor's own parents and most of their family, Stephanie's parents are medical professionals. The original Republic of Haven, if it exists at all yet, has not decayed to become the corrupt and totalitarian "People's Republic of Haven" and so the military threat posed by the "Peeps" lies many years in the future.

However, the vast and ruthless conspiracy which will eventually become known as the Mesan Alignment was seven hundred years old in Honor's time and therefore already exists in Stephanie's. One wicked human whose actions in the first book damaged human and treecat relations may - or may not - have had links to them. We know from comments in the later "Honorverse" books that the Mesans will take an interest in treecats, and this may come out in the next book in this series, "The Treecat Wars."

If you like the treecats in David Weber's other books you should read this. It's enjoyable and very interesting as long as you are not among that part of Weber's fanbase who read him solely for the battles.

If anyone reading this is a big fan of military or naval science fiction, and in the unlikely event that such a person has somehow managed to avoid reading any of the Honor Harrington books, click on the following link to the first book in Honor's story, "On Basilisk Station (Honor Harrington)," and you are unlikely to be disappointed.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
lizzy shannon
This book picks up the narrative shortly after the end of Beautiful Friendship. Once again we get to follow Stephanie Harrington and her family as they struggle with the problem of helping the treecats without inciting the citizens of Sphinx to demand their extermination.

This story is strong. It concentrates on only 2 characters. Stephanie and her treecat "Climbs Quickly". There are a myriad of other characters, but they are clearly there to support the main characters and tale. This is a huge improvement over stories like Rising Thunder or War Maid's Choice where every chapter jumped to a different character and the story lacked clear focus.

This also is clearly written more to "young adult" readers. The main characters are teenage and there are moments of angst and drama that would have fit right in any of the Twilight books, but they are kept light and never allowed to overwhelm the characters or the plot.

This story have been a surprisingly bright spot in teh Honorverse. It' might be that David Weber allowed a co-writer in and that kept the story much more focused. I definitely encourage those interested in this tale to read Beautiful Friendship first as several plot points are building off events from that book, but otherwise its simply a good if light read.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
emily rollins
This is the second book in the series that details mans first contact with Treecats - which if you have read any of the honor Harrington books you will be somewhat familiar. This series is intended for 'young adults' (Really dislike that term. Your either an adult or not). But like Heinlein, Weber's 'young adult' fiction is truly suitable for all ages. I strongly recommend that you read the first book in this series - although it is not necessary to do so to follow the stories, you will find references to things that occured them. And since these are so much fun to read, why not read them all?

Like all good writing, this book centers around characters. This series focuses on the Stephanie Harrinton (Honor's ancestor) and her discovery of Treecats on Sphinx, a world with gravity greater than the terrestrial norm. Harrington is a product of gene modification that makes her physioligy stronger and better able to deal with a 'heavy world environment'. Some of the other people you meet are of unmodified stock, which nicely affect the story.

This is one of the rare series that I will read them all without stopping. Binge reading? But its a fact that these are well written and fun. The science seems correct (although its not weighted down with a lot of theory, its just part of the story). Do you enjoy adventure? Like well written books? Like Science Fiction? (Even if you don't you will likely enjoy this). You can read in great detail the blog as to what this is about.

One plus is I don't even have to buy the third book as my wife has already done so!
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
jone
Fire Season (2012) is the second SF novel in the Star Kingdom sequence, following A Beautiful Friendship. This series are prequels to the Honor Harrington series.

In the previous volume, the long seventeen months winter on Sphinx was finally over. Now Stephanie wanted to explore this new planet. But her father and mother forbade her to roam the forests as she had done on Meyerdahl.

Stephanie had just been accepted as an intern in the junior forestry program on Meyerdahl. Sphinx was too new and the forestry service was too small to have such programs. The Chief Forester would have liked to develop something like that, but not anytime soon.

Her father pointed out that Sphinx has been only lightly explored. There were still many places, animals and plants that have not yet been investigated. There were also sufficient known dangers to preclude such activities.

None of the kids in Two Forks were interested in xeno-biology. They were interested in pets, but were very likely to abuse or neglect them. She was also more intelligent than almost every other kid in town.

Stephanie was inspired by a minor mystery in the horticulture community. Something was stealing celery from greenhouses. She studied the attempts to catch the thieves and noticed a flaw in the plans.

In this novel, Stephanie Harrington is Richard and Marjorie's fourteen -- going on fifteen -- standard years old daughter. Steph doesn't like most of the people her age within Two Forks, but she is bonded with Climbs Quickly. Her treecat name is Death Fang's Bane. She is now a provisional forest ranger, a title created just for her and Karl.

Richard Harrington has degrees in both Terran and xeno-veterinary medicine. He was enticed to move his practice from Meyerdahl to Sphinx. He comes from a gengineered family adapted for heavy gravity planets like Meyerdahl and Sphinx.

Marjorie Harrington is Richard's wife and the mother of Stephanie. She is a xeno-botantist and is even more busy than her husband. She too has the heavy grav modifications.

Climbs Quickly is a treecat. His species is sapient and native to the planet of Sphinx. They had been avoiding the two-legged newcomers until Stephanie got pictures of Climbs Quickly steal celery from her mother's greenhouse. He now has only five legs after the hexapuma attack.

Karl Zivonik is Stephanie's only young human friend. He is a standard year and a half older then her. He is also a provisional forest ranger.

Anders Whittaker is a youngster about Steph's age from Urako. His father is a xenoanthropologist and his mother is a cabinet minister in the planetary government.

Left-striped and Right-striped are mirror twin six-legged treecats from the Damp Ground clan. They are scouts watching humans.

In this story, Stephanie wants her provisional license to fly aircars. She doesn't want the learner's permit that allows her to fly only with an adult in the car. She has trained on the simulators and thinks that she is ready for real.

Karl has been talked into letting her practice in his family's aircar. They are flying low between the trees and Stephanie is realizing that real flight is more confusing than the simulations. Climbs Quickly is getting bored in the aircar and "asks" Steph to open his window.

Karl tells Climbs Quickly to move to the backseat and then rolls up the window. The aircar jinks with the extra drag and Stephanie has to compensate. Then Climbs Quickly smell wood fire smoke.

When Climbs Quickly sits on Karl's lap and points south, Steph and Karl decide to check the situation. Karl changes places with Stephane and speed up. Soon they see the smoke and then two treecats trapped in the burn area.

Karl eases up to a limb below where the treecats are located. Steph jumps out and walks across the limb in her fire suit. She takes the weight of Right-striped and Left-striped scamper over the limb to the aircar. Steph follows behind with his burned brother.

They fly back to the veterinary lab at Stephanie's homestead. Richard treats the burned paws of Right-striped and more minor burns on his brother. Both treecats stay in the gazebo while recovering.

Anders comes to Sphinx with his father to investigate the treecats. He is only a relatively unskilled laborer on the team, but he would rather be on Sphinx than with his very busy mother on Urako. Besides, he has read much about the treecats and Stephanie Harrington.

Dr. Whittaker doesn't trust the Sphinxian Forestry Service. He figures that they are more concerted about the humans that the natives. So he decides to visit a deserted clan site without SFS permission.

Unfortunate for the xenoanthropology team, Dr. Whittaker lands the airvan in a dry-looking bog. It sinks under the ground. The team manages to save some things in the back.

Unluckily, their offworld communicators don't work with the satellite systems around Sphinx. They are stranded in an unknown location for days. Then a giant forest fire breaks out and diverts local resources to fight the flames.

This tale brings romance to Stephanie and Anders. She also gains some new friends in Two Forks. And he receives some respect from the anthropology team.

The co-author is relatively new to this publisher, with her previous works being stories in the Man-Kzin Wars and Worlds of Honor anthologies. But she has been writing novels -- see Brother to Dragons, Companion to Owls -- for over a decade. Most, but not all, of her novels are Fantasy and usually involve young females and sapient animals. She is a good partner for Weber in this series.

The treecats learn that some two-legs are responsible and useful. The next installment in this series -- The Treecat Wars -- has not yet been announced on the store.

Highly recommended for Weber & LIndskold fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of alien planets, natural disaster, and a bit of romance. Read and enjoy!

-Arthur W. Jordin
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
hijaab
Second in the Honorverse: Stephanie Harrington science fiction fantasy for young adults.

The Honorverse is an overall label for stories and series that are offshoots from the Honor Harrington space opera series. In this case, the label is telling us that the series is about Stephanie and is part of the overall Honor Harrington Universe.

My Take
Unlike Tamora Pierce, I didn't find it thrilling or edge-of-my-seat, but it was a good read and provides more insight into Stephanie's life as she's growing into her partnership with Lionheart.

One of the things I love about the entire Harrington Universe is the virtues that Weber's characters display. Well, the good guys anyway! Fire Season is no exception with the officials of an entire world more interested in protecting treecats than in soliciting favor with others.

There are some good moral lessons for the kids in this. Consideration for others' feelings and handling charitable concerns. Reality is different from a video game. The responsibility that comes with wanting independence. That being different does not mean less. The benefit of knowing some first aid. Turns out that mom was right about socializing. Doing something stupid doesn't negate a species' sentience. I did like Dr. Emberly's point about sharks!

It was just so fascinating and frustrating to read each specie's thoughts and ideas and know how Honor and Nimitz figure out how to communicate in more than just an exchange of emotions in the HH series. That it will be so far in the future before treecats and humans can communicate with each other. Still, reading Lionheart's thoughts about the mouth sounds, the markings they make, and the hand waving that humans use to somehow communicate is just too funny. And makes me think of how important communication is. How different what one culture takes for granted can be from what another thinks is normal.

In this story, Sphinx is trying to get treecats officially acknowledged as a sentient species and Weber/Lindskold use the dangerous fire season to help demonstrate their abilities and "humanity". It also provides the treecats the opportunity to see that humans are as varied in their character as individual treecats are.

There is a mention of Eric Flint, an author with whom Weber has partnered in the story.

The Story
Stephanie and Karl are both probationary rangers for the Sphinxian Forestry Service and they're overflying the forest near home when Lionheart gets agitated and insists they follow his direction. A good thing as a couple of treecats are in danger and it begins the learning experience for the Damp Ground Clan about humans.

Anders is thrilled that his dad wants to take him along on his treecat mission. Until he finds out why. Still, it's a good thing Anders did go as he was the savior on that trip!

The Characters
Stephanie Harrington, a.k.a., Death Fang's Bane*, is Honor's ancestress and almost fifteen in this story. She's also the first human to befriend a treecat, Lionheart, a.k.a., Climbs Quickly* and they've been together for three T-years. Richard, a.k.a., Healer, and Margery/Marjorie Harrington are her parents. Her dad is a vet and her mother is a botanist developing hybrids that can survive and thrive on Sphinx.

Members of Lionheart's treecat clan, Bright Water, include:
Sings Truly is Lionheart's sister and a memory singer for the Bright Water Clan. Other members include Twig Weaver and Stone Biter, a clan elder and not as conservative as Broken Tooth.

Karl Zivonik, a.k.a., Shadowed Sunlight, is sixteen and Stephanie's only real friend, more of a big brother really. He's hoping to be taken on as a provisionary ranger in the Sphinxian Forestry Service. Most of his family died in the Plague and he now lives with his Aunt Irina Kisaevna who is married to Scott MacDallan, the only other living human adopted by a treecat, Fisher. Nadia and Anastasia are his little sisters.

The Sphinixian Foresty Service (SFS)
Rangers Frank Lethbridge and Ainsley Jedruskinski have the largest role while there is a mention of Chief Ranger Gary Shelton. Dr. Sanura Hobbard is the "official head of the official Crown inquiry into treecat intelligence" for Manticore.

"Dr." Tennessee Bolego was a fraud and has forced changes in the Star Kingdom's approach to treecats.

Kids within Stephanie's age group include:
Trudy Franchitti is a year older than Stephanie and definitely NOT one of her friends. Her whole family is quite snobbish about their pioneer status on the planet. The two of them have a hot feud going on. Stan Chang is Trudy's boyfriend and is frequently high. He's good friends with Frank "Outta Focus" Câmara. Becky Morowitz is part of Trudy's clique as well. Toby Mednick is younger and Stan and Frank frequently gang up on him. Jessica Pheriss/Pherris, a.k.a., Windswept, is new and has joined the hang-gliding club. Jessica is adopted by Dirt Grubber, also known by his human name of Valiant, when they each rescue each other. She has it kind of rough with six siblings she feels responsible for as her mother, Naomi, works too hard. Christine. Chet/Chad.

Mayor Sapristos tends to favor the bad eggs because of their parents' status.

The Damp Ground Clan includes
Left-Striped and Right-Striped are mirror twin treecats caught by a sudden fire at the start of the story and play a major role later on. Brilliant Images is their skeptical senior memory singer.

The off-world anthropology team includes:
Anders Whittaker is the fifteen-year-old son of an obsessed scientist and an equally obsessed politician. He agitates to accompany his father on his mission as he's totally fascinated by Stephanie Harrington and her treecat.His mother has recently been promoted from being a senior representative to Cabinet Minister Whittaker for the Urako president. His father, Dr. Bradford A. Whittaker is a xenoanthropologist who is absolutely fascinated by treecats. He's also "grasping, ambitious, and self-absorbed". Their son is not as important as their own careers.

Dr. Langston Nez just got his doctorate in cultural anthropology and has been Dr. Whittaker's senior assistant for years. Dr. Calida Emberly is the xenobiologist and xenobotanist and is looking forward to discussions about plants with Stephanie's mother; her mother, Dacey Emberly, is a painter and will handle scientific illustrations. Kesia Guyen is their colorful linguist and her husband, John Qin, is interested in setting up some kind of trade on or with Sphinix. Virgil Iwamoto is lithics (use of tools) and up-to-date on the latest field methods who just got married to Peony Rose partly because he was about to head out to Sphinx on this mission.

* Each treecat has two names: the one by which s/he is known among the People (the treecats) and the human name given by his/her partner. The treecats also give humans a treecat name. Treecats are a sentient species found only on the planet Sphinx. They are somewhat in appearance to housecats, but are longer, have six legs, and communicate empathically. The babies are called kittens and each clan of treecats is ruled by a memory singer, one who holds all the knowledge of past history.

Weber/Lindskold need to decide which names certain of their characters are using.

The Cover
The orange, black, and greys cover is rather mournful with a pensive Stephanie slumped on her knees on the ground wearing a black fire-suit, a counter-grav unit on her back, and cuddling Lionheart.

The title is short and to the point for it is Fire Season and it causes all sorts of problems.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
randy inman
Fire Season is the second Stephanie Harrington novel, the new YA series from David Weber. I thoroughly enjoyed A Beautiful Friendship, so reading Fire Season was a no-brainer. I knew that Jane Lindskold was on board for co-writing duties, and I questioned how this would effect the novel, and how different it could be in tone and style to A Beautiful Friendship. Turns out the answer wasn't what I hoped for, and Fire Season marked a change in both style and storytelling.

With Sphinx entering the end of its long Summer, the forests of the planet are ripe for fires. Stephanie and Climbs Quickly are Forest Rangers, travelling with a more experienced partner and helping where possible. While on one of these excursions, Climbs Quickly identifies the calls of some Treecats in peril, and swiftly alerts Stephanie, guiding her to their location in order to help them. And this is just the start of the Fire Season...

I'm not going to say much else about the story in Fire Season because it's all in the title. Fires rage, Stephanie and Climbs Quickly respond where they can, and Treecats are rescued. Add in a few smaller plot threads - an off-world scientific team studying the Treecats, Stephanie's relationships - and that's Fire Season for you.

To be honest, I'm disappointed. I really thought that there was so much potential after reading A Beautiful Friendship, and while their were glimpses of it in Fire Season, it really didn't live up to expectations.

The major downside to Fire Season, when compared to A Beautiful Friendship, is the prose and style. I really don't know how much of this novel was written by each author, and while I thought there were times I could see Weber's writing, it feels flat. While the first novel was aimed (or at least written) at an older YA audience, Fire Season seems to be undecided as to its target audience. There some times, like most of the the day-to-day incidents that plague Stephanie (i.e. boy issues, friendships, etc), where it's written towards a very young crowd, while at others (like the scientific party discussions) are clearly above such a readership. With no consistency in the writing, Fire Season fails at delivering a gripping and exciting story.

It's such a shame, because their is huge potential here for some truly interesting and exciting stories. Perhaps the subject matter of this one limited the scope, or perhaps Weber & Lindskold were adjusting to working together on a novel. Either way, I've come away unsure whether or not to try the next novel, Treecat Wars. I'm interested in it, but I'm also worried it will be the last Stephanie Harrington novel I read....
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
amani bryant
As a school librarian, I have to read many things to help me recommend books for my students. This one I read for myself, but I could and probably will recommend this for some of my advanced 5th grade readers who want to try something different. I will tell them to read A Beautiful Friendship (book 1) before this one for the necessary background. David Weber is a SUPER author, and I love everything that that I have read. He *is* getting more into the politics and the descriptions of how everyone dies in his Honor books, but I still love them. I can see these as a great introduction to the Honor Harrington series. If kids like these, then they can go on to Honor. If Honor is too much for them at that time, she will still be there later on, when they have matured a little. Thank you, David Weber, for another satisfying read.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
georgi
Teenager Stephanie Harrington was euphoric when she obtained an internship in the junior forestry program on Meyerdahl. However, she became depressed when her family including her relocated to Sphinx, which had no such program. The seventeen-month winter and her boring peers at the Two Forks School are uninterested in her passion xeno-biology which adds to her despondency. Stephanie investigated the stealing of celery. That led to her meeting and bonding with Climbs Quickly the treecat. The Chief Forester named her and her only human friend Karl Zivonik is a provisional forest ranger (see A Beautiful Friendship).

Stephanie persuades Karl to allow her to use his family's aircar to practice flying. As the provisional forest rangers and Climbs Quickly fly, the treecat smells smoke. They inspect the fire and rescue twin treecats Left-striped and Right-striped who they bring to her father, a veterinarian.

Xenoanthropologist Dr. Whittaker arrives from Urako with his team and his son Anders to study the treecats. He distrusts the government including the Sphinxian Forestry Service to put the interests of the native population above those of the humans. Thus he leads his unit on an exploration of an abandoned clan site only to have their air-vehicle sink into the ground leaving them stranded while struggling to survive as forest fires ignites.

The second Stephanie Harrington Star Kingdom young adult science fiction thriller is a superb prequel to the Honor Harrington saga. The key cast is fully developed regardless of species or national origin. The storyline is great when the focus is on the interactions between the two species or the exploration of the planet; however, the teen relationships seem stereotypical. Still fans will enjoy exploring Sphinx with Harrington as our guide.

Harriet Klausner
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
zaher alkhateeb
This book is primarily a YA book. But, it adds much knowledge about the beginning of the tree cat/human relationship. It also fills in more information about the early days of life on Sphinx and Honor's ancestors.

I bought it as an e-book and feel that it was an accurate price to pay for a good read. If there is a YA girl in your home, this entire series would be a good idea for her. In fact, I should not be sexist. It is a good read for any YA. It will make them want to read the more "grown up" of Weber's books.

Buy it, you will like it.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
jay jay
More like a 3.5.

I found this sequel to "A Beautiful Friendship" to be more of a real YA title than the first book, which I felt might also have been more interesting to an adult audience as well. Yes, in "Fire Season" we are learning more about how the relationship between tree cats and humans began and developed, but there was also an awful lot of teen age angst.

I found "Fire" to be somewhat formulaic and ho hum, and lacking the same high level of interest and real excitement that was generated by "Friendship."
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
kim bulger
This is not a political or military piece of the Harrington saga but it is a cozy little prehistory corner. If you are not interested in treecats, this might be too "young"adult or teen for you. But the characters, setting and plot are well developed and this story arc fits well with the other story arcs in the vast Manticore world history. I hope it attracts teen readers who will then want to read more Weber.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
ashwin
The Stephanie Harrington books are an easier read than the Honor Harrington books. They don't contain the endless, unnecessary technical details, and are heavier on storylines. While it is billed as "young adult fiction," they read more like "soft sci-fi," with a teenage protagonist.

Like Honor, Stephanie is a Mary Sue, but such a kick-ass Mary Sue you love to see how she's going to win under impossible odds - again. The treecats are wonderfully well written, and their culture, mostly ignored in the Honor series, is explored and explained, so this is a must-read series for Honor Harrington fans - even the techie types who actually enjoy the endless technical specifications for imaginary spaceships.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
aman3h
It is a YA, more about Stephanie's social and personal crises than about outside events. However, Weber and Lindskold manage to weave the two aspects together nicely - we learn a bit more about treecats, and the 'cats and humans learn more about each other. Fun, and I'm looking forward to the next one.

http://www.librarything.com/work/12367579/reviews/98137078
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
phillyroll
If you're familiar with Weber's Honor Harrington stories, you've already put this novel on your wishlist. If not, go read "A Beautiful Friendship" first, as this is the sequel. I'm a big fan of aliens that are soft and fuzzy. Weber's Tree Cats (or Treecats) are all that, considering that they are also predatory hexapods with a culture on the order of, for example, pre-contact the storeian Indians.

The novel continues the tale of Stephanie Harrington and Climbs Swiftly. Good story-telling includes both drama and memorable characters. This book passes that test, though some of the minor characters are less well developed.

My only gripe is that the book seems precocious -- events in this series take place generations before Honor Harrington was born yet the interaction between Stephanie and Climbs Swiftly is on a par with Honor and Nimitz. And in the H.H. stories, you get the impression that this level of interaction was unprecidented. So how come everybody seems to have forgotten how smart Tree Cats really are?

Looking forward to the next volume in this delightful series...
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
cardi
I got this as an audiobook from Audible. I hesitated over what rating to give it. I don't want to give it a bad rating, but I didn't really feel like it deserved 4 stars. I guess if I could have, I would have given it 3.5 stars.

This book is aimed at "young adults" (read: teenagers). I am not a teenager. I'm in my 60s. There are some young adult books and series that I practically adore. One of my favorites, which I wish Audible would get, is the Thief of Eddis series by Megan Whalen Turner. But there are other young adult books that don't really intersect my interests. This book sort of wavered around that border.

For example, part of the dramatic tension of the story revolved around how to deal with another teenager who is rude and conceited. (Yawn) I recognize that this is going to matter a lot more to teens than to me. Luckily, much of the story revolved around problems I could get more excited about, i.e. forest fires. (I don't think I'm giving away too much here since the title of the book is.....just saying.)

Another problem: Just how much of this book did David Weber write? I have heard of book collaborations where both authors worked on every page together. I have also heard of pseudo-collaborations where the big name author gave the little name author a basic plot outline and then walked away, but still got top billing because he was the BIG NAME. I think I detect a lot more Jane Lindskold than David Weber in this book. That isn't horrible because she isn't a horrible writer. But she isn't David Weber either. And face it, I could be wrong. It does happen from time to time.

Bottom line: Do I feel like I wasted my money? No. Will I buy the next book in this series? Uh....probably.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
jess mahan
The Tree Cat books are an excellent addition to the Honor Harrington Universe and provide an early view of the human to tree cat relationship and story that is in the main series. Good read, great characters, and lots of tension.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
shehan
This sequel to "A Beautiful Friendship" was an excellent read. Not jut for the YA audience but for ages. The authors have done a terrefic job of pulling you into the the lives of the characters and the plot. I would recommend it for all ages.

Phronsie McDade, Chattanooga, TN
Sci Fi, Etc.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
rachel bemis
This book is a sequel to A Beautiful Friendship, which won the 2012 Hal Clement Award, an award given annually by the science fiction community for YA fiction and awarded at the WorldCon science fiction conventions.
★ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
seafriend
This book is a significant rehash of things already written in other versions.
Only "dumbed down" to a very low reading level.

Not for current fans. Nor for their children, as geekyness does run in families. Maybe for people who can't comprehend anything more complex than the latest social tweet???

I returned my copy for a refund.
★ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
sameer rane
I have come to expect much more from Weber than such as this. The story seemed pretty good, following up on A Beautiful Friendship but became diverted to more of a kid's story. I suspect Weber had little to do with it other than providing the characters.
Please RateFire Season (Honor Harrington - Star Kingdom Book 2)
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